Description

Book Synopsis

Social Theory is more than a reader. Feminists, race theorists, decolonizing leaders, and others are thoughtfully introduced by Charles Lemertâs substantial commentaries. Social Theory has always sought to keep up with the new while respecting the oldâfrom Durkheim and Weber to Latinx and LGBTQ pioneers. When the book first appeared it was, as it remains, a collection of selections from those who have changed how we think about social things. Today, as the world is threatened by a global wave of anti-democratic movements, Social Theory adds a new early section to remind us of the origins of democratic values in the 1700s. A new concluding section focuses the theoretical mind on how, in the 2020s, social theorists are rethinking the world in order to better understand and resist the menace of anti-democratic movements.



Trade Review

"This anthology has helped transform social theory. Charles Lemert was a pioneer in bringing cultural diversity and globalization into dialog with classical sociology. The collection continues to break new ground today."

Craig Calhoun, Arizona State University, USA

"I fell in love with social theory because of this book. Charles Lemert’s reader provides an indispensable overview of the theories that shaped sociology as a discipline. His carefully curated collection leaves no stone unturned in its pursuit of a truly comprehensive guide to social theory, encompassing both well-known theorists and those whose voices were marginalized until recently. Thus, the book places the writings of Marx, Weber, Simmel, Durkheim, Freud, Mead, James, Parsons, Merton and Blumer alongside those of notable women and scholars of color, including Du Bois, Anna Julia Cooper, Jane Addams, Simone de Beauvoir, Franz Fanon, Dorothy Smith, Patricia Hill Collins, and Judith Butler. Equally impressive is the range of topics the Lemert’s book covers, from stratification, power, culture, social order, capitalism, and revolution to contemporary topics such as deviance, globalization, postmodernism, symbolic interaction, feminist theory, critical race theory, queer theory, semiotics, ethnography, ethnomethodology, neoliberalism, and world systems theory. The book was groundbreaking in its scope and inclusiveness when it was first published over thirty years ago, and it continues to set the standard for theory readers today."

Waverly Duck, University of Pittsburgh, USA

"This book presents a provocative, wide-angle view of the history of social theory. Well chosen selections from the new social movements as well as the classics and recent mainstream make this book a fine introduction to courses in the social sciences."

Sandra Harding, University of California, Los Angeles,USA



Table of Contents

Part 1. 1690-1919, Modernity’s Classical Age

Social Foundations of Modern Democracy

The Unthinkable Two Sides of Society

Split Lives in the Modern World

Part 2. 1919-1945, Social Theories and World Conflict

Action and Knowledge in a Troubled World

Unavoidable Dilemmas

Part 3. 1945-1964, The Golden Moment

The Golden Age

Doubts and Reservations

Others Object

Part 4. 1963-1979, Will the Center Hold?

Experiments in Renewal and Reconstruction

Part 5. 1969-2001, After Modernity

The Idea of the Postmodern and Its Critics

Reactions and Alternatives

New Cultural Theories After Modernity

Part 6. After 2001, Global Realities in an Uncertain Future

Global Uncertainties

Rethinking the Past That Haunts the Future

Is the Modern Order Broken?

Social Theory

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    £65.54

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    RRP £68.99 – you save £3.45 (5%)

    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Fri 26 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback by Charles Lemert

    15 in stock


      View other formats and editions of Social Theory by Charles Lemert

      Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
      Publication Date: 5/28/2021 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780367272685, 978-0367272685
      ISBN10: 0367272687
      Also in:
      Philosophy

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Social Theory is more than a reader. Feminists, race theorists, decolonizing leaders, and others are thoughtfully introduced by Charles Lemertâs substantial commentaries. Social Theory has always sought to keep up with the new while respecting the oldâfrom Durkheim and Weber to Latinx and LGBTQ pioneers. When the book first appeared it was, as it remains, a collection of selections from those who have changed how we think about social things. Today, as the world is threatened by a global wave of anti-democratic movements, Social Theory adds a new early section to remind us of the origins of democratic values in the 1700s. A new concluding section focuses the theoretical mind on how, in the 2020s, social theorists are rethinking the world in order to better understand and resist the menace of anti-democratic movements.



      Trade Review

      "This anthology has helped transform social theory. Charles Lemert was a pioneer in bringing cultural diversity and globalization into dialog with classical sociology. The collection continues to break new ground today."

      Craig Calhoun, Arizona State University, USA

      "I fell in love with social theory because of this book. Charles Lemert’s reader provides an indispensable overview of the theories that shaped sociology as a discipline. His carefully curated collection leaves no stone unturned in its pursuit of a truly comprehensive guide to social theory, encompassing both well-known theorists and those whose voices were marginalized until recently. Thus, the book places the writings of Marx, Weber, Simmel, Durkheim, Freud, Mead, James, Parsons, Merton and Blumer alongside those of notable women and scholars of color, including Du Bois, Anna Julia Cooper, Jane Addams, Simone de Beauvoir, Franz Fanon, Dorothy Smith, Patricia Hill Collins, and Judith Butler. Equally impressive is the range of topics the Lemert’s book covers, from stratification, power, culture, social order, capitalism, and revolution to contemporary topics such as deviance, globalization, postmodernism, symbolic interaction, feminist theory, critical race theory, queer theory, semiotics, ethnography, ethnomethodology, neoliberalism, and world systems theory. The book was groundbreaking in its scope and inclusiveness when it was first published over thirty years ago, and it continues to set the standard for theory readers today."

      Waverly Duck, University of Pittsburgh, USA

      "This book presents a provocative, wide-angle view of the history of social theory. Well chosen selections from the new social movements as well as the classics and recent mainstream make this book a fine introduction to courses in the social sciences."

      Sandra Harding, University of California, Los Angeles,USA



      Table of Contents

      Part 1. 1690-1919, Modernity’s Classical Age

      Social Foundations of Modern Democracy

      The Unthinkable Two Sides of Society

      Split Lives in the Modern World

      Part 2. 1919-1945, Social Theories and World Conflict

      Action and Knowledge in a Troubled World

      Unavoidable Dilemmas

      Part 3. 1945-1964, The Golden Moment

      The Golden Age

      Doubts and Reservations

      Others Object

      Part 4. 1963-1979, Will the Center Hold?

      Experiments in Renewal and Reconstruction

      Part 5. 1969-2001, After Modernity

      The Idea of the Postmodern and Its Critics

      Reactions and Alternatives

      New Cultural Theories After Modernity

      Part 6. After 2001, Global Realities in an Uncertain Future

      Global Uncertainties

      Rethinking the Past That Haunts the Future

      Is the Modern Order Broken?

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